Friday, November 5, 2010

Understanding The Process Of IT Automation

People generally like to talk about the future, perhaps this because most aspects of the future are shrouded in mystery. Another thing that keeps people speculating about the future is change. This is especially the case on the business arena. When we talk of business, it is clear that one of the main driving forces behind businesses is IT. With so many things in the business arena changing, there is need for a perfect IT system that will keep up. IT automation is the best option to ensure continued success.

With IT automation, it will be possible for business organizations to increase their agility hence dealing with sudden shifts in the market, changing customer behavior, emerging competition and constantly evolving technologies. It can also be useful in dealing with cascading mergers or acquisitions. Increased agility allows for business processes that cannot only constantly change, but can readily adapt to change as it happens. It also means finding ways to leverage new information into more complex combinations than currently exist. Not wanting to, throw the baby out with the bathwater, IT automation must be capable of including existing information from a variety of platforms, including legacy applications, mainframes and metadata. It will also be expected to maintain a data flow of information pertaining to customers and suppliers. Keeping the old and adapting to the new is why IT automation is the wave of the future. Given what we have witnessed over the last decade, it would be impossible to argue that current systems will maintain the status quo for any length of time. Technology only lasts as long as a new technology is developed, which has pretty much been at warp speed. As our Grandparents could not conceive of the concept of airplane travel, so too, we cannot imagine the technological advances that will evolve in the future. Web services have enabled most of us to collect new types of data from within and without an organization. Companies have significantly improved data collection methods, with RFID promising even higher levels of real time data transfers. This improvement, however, has generated a new set of challenges in integration, collections, filtering and deciphering.

With all these apparent challenges it should be clear that remaining static on the current systems is not the way to the future. This is why many IT departments are challenged to react. What with the companies resources being too stretched to adapt fast. Such overworked IT departments only find consolation in shifting most of the burden to existing systems with people offering direction only.

Defining IT automation is not as simple as it may sound. Considerations include checking the prevailing conditions for their data center model in order to define and set the parameters, thereby ensuring expectations will be in line with achievable goals. The outcome? Automation must adapt to varying parameters in different organizations. There is no more cruise control when it comes to business in the new Millennium. Once the perfect automation approach is identified the only remaining function is to identify the components which are best suited for the process. That is, until the parameters change.

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